I went to see a therapist today and I'm considering going to work with her.
The session brought up several questions that I have. I'd like to ask them here, hoping others here know more about PTSD and how it 'works'... If there's other threads on the topics I'm mentioning please feel free to direct me there...
(Background: Almost twenty years ago I was hospitalized because of psychosis and diagnosed with Bipolar disorder.
Lately my psychiatrist is suggesting that part of my history of illness has to do with PTSD rather than Bipolar disorder. She thinks I'm a case of 'second generation' PTSD: my father has been diagnosed with it a few years ago.
I'm trying to get more information and insights into PTSD to see if this could be true. So far I found a lot of information on PTSD that I can relate to, and many ways to deal with PTSD that I read about and try to apply, work well for me.)
A One of my questions is: could it be possible that an experience I had when I was only two years old, and my parents left me in the care of my grandmother for a few weeks, is part of the cause for PTSD?
I have always had great fear of abandonment and I'm thinking
that this experience may be the, or a, cause for that.
B Another question I have is: during my treatment in psychiatric hospital I went trough certain traumatic events such as being locked up in solitary confinement, and having been injected medication againt my will. (Four people holding me down). The worst of these experiences took place 5 years ago).
I tend to think my main problems are communication (showing a calm face or 'front' when I'm triggered and feeling panic inside), and dissociation (I'm beginning to wonder that maybe in everyday life, I'm never really truly in touch with myself, my body, my feelings).
The question is: could it be that these problems have become more severe because of the later trauma, being added on to the childhood experiences?
C Then a more general question is that I keep wondering if what I went through (living with a father with PTSD, having been abandoned the way I described, and the 'treatment' in psychiatry) is 'enough' to develop PTSD from?
I keep having a feeling that this was not 'real' trauma?
Thank you for reading. I'm hoping I'm making myself clear enough in this post... English is not my mother tongue...
Any thoughts you care to share, on the questions or on my situation, are welcome.
Freya
The session brought up several questions that I have. I'd like to ask them here, hoping others here know more about PTSD and how it 'works'... If there's other threads on the topics I'm mentioning please feel free to direct me there...
(Background: Almost twenty years ago I was hospitalized because of psychosis and diagnosed with Bipolar disorder.
Lately my psychiatrist is suggesting that part of my history of illness has to do with PTSD rather than Bipolar disorder. She thinks I'm a case of 'second generation' PTSD: my father has been diagnosed with it a few years ago.
I'm trying to get more information and insights into PTSD to see if this could be true. So far I found a lot of information on PTSD that I can relate to, and many ways to deal with PTSD that I read about and try to apply, work well for me.)
A One of my questions is: could it be possible that an experience I had when I was only two years old, and my parents left me in the care of my grandmother for a few weeks, is part of the cause for PTSD?
I have always had great fear of abandonment and I'm thinking
that this experience may be the, or a, cause for that.
B Another question I have is: during my treatment in psychiatric hospital I went trough certain traumatic events such as being locked up in solitary confinement, and having been injected medication againt my will. (Four people holding me down). The worst of these experiences took place 5 years ago).
I tend to think my main problems are communication (showing a calm face or 'front' when I'm triggered and feeling panic inside), and dissociation (I'm beginning to wonder that maybe in everyday life, I'm never really truly in touch with myself, my body, my feelings).
The question is: could it be that these problems have become more severe because of the later trauma, being added on to the childhood experiences?
C Then a more general question is that I keep wondering if what I went through (living with a father with PTSD, having been abandoned the way I described, and the 'treatment' in psychiatry) is 'enough' to develop PTSD from?
I keep having a feeling that this was not 'real' trauma?
Thank you for reading. I'm hoping I'm making myself clear enough in this post... English is not my mother tongue...
Any thoughts you care to share, on the questions or on my situation, are welcome.
Freya